Fundamentals Part 1

Learning Outcomes

Look through these now and then use them to test yourself after doing the assignment:

How do you declare a variable?

What are three different ways to declare a variable?

Which one should you use when?

What are the rules for naming variables?

What are operators, operands, and operations?

What is concatenation and what happens when you add numbers and strings together?

What are the different type of operators in JavaScript?

What is the difference between == and ===?

What are operator precedence values?

What are the increment/decrement operators?

What is the difference between prefixing and post-fixing them?

What are assignment operators?

What is the “Unary +” Operator?

Numbers

Numbers are the building blocks of programming logic! In fact, it’s hard to think of any useful programming task that doesn’t involve at least a little basic math… so knowing how numbers work is obviously quite important. Luckily, it’s also fairly straightforward.

This MDN article covers the same info from a slightly different point of view. There’s much more that you can do with numbers, but this is all you need at the moment.

Read through (and code along with!) this article about operators in Javascript. Don’t forget to do the “Tasks” at the bottom of the page! It will give you a pretty good idea of what you can accomplish with numbers (among other things!) in JavaScript.

Variables

You can think of variables as simply “storage containers” for data in your code. Until recently there was only one way to create a variable in JavaScript — the var statement. But in the newest JavaScript versions we have two more ways — let and const.

This variable tutorial will explain you everything you need to know! Be sure to do the Tasks at the end. Information won’t stick without practice!

The above tutorial mentioned this, but it’s important enough to note again: let and const are both relatively new ways to declare variables in JavaScript. In many tutorials (and code) across the internet you’re likely to encounter var statements. Don’t let it bother you! There’s nothing inherently wrong with var, and in most cases var and let behave the same way. But sometimes the behavior of var is not what you would expect. Just stick to let (and const) for now. The precise differences between var and let will be explained later.

Practice!

You can easily run your own JavaScript code from files you create on your computer. The simplest way to get started is to simply create an HTML file with the JavaScript code inside of it. Type the basic HTML skeleton into a file on your computer somewhere:

Save and open this file up in a web browser and then open up the browser’s console by right-clicking on the blank webpage and selecting “Inspect” or “Inspect Element”. In the ‘Developer Tools’ pane find and select the ‘Console’ tab, where you should see the output of our console.log statement.

console.log() is the command to print something to the developer console in your browser. Use it for all of the following exercises.

If you type percentage in the console and press enter you should see a value like 0.7719

Take a few minutes to keep playing around with various things in your script tag. Eventually, we will learn how to actually make those numbers and things show up on the webpage, but all of this logic will remain the same, so make sure you’re comfortable with it before moving on.